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Safety of mometasone furoate nasal spray in the treatment of nasal polyps in children
Author(s) -
Chur Victor,
Small Catherine B.,
Stryszak Paul,
Teper Ariel
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
pediatric allergy and immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.269
H-Index - 89
eISSN - 1399-3038
pISSN - 0905-6157
DOI - 10.1111/pai.12032
Subject(s) - mometasone furoate , medicine , nasal spray , placebo , nasal polyps , adverse effect , urinary system , creatinine , renal function , urology , nasal administration , corticosteroid , immunology , alternative medicine , pathology
Background Mometasone furoate nasal spray ( MFNS ) improves nasal symptoms and reduces polyp size in adults with nasal polyposis. This 4‐month, multinational, randomized, double‐blind study was conducted to assess the safety of MFNS in pediatric subjects aged 6–17 yr. Methods Subjects aged 6–11 yr with bilateral nasal polyps received MFNS 100 μg once or twice daily or placebo; those aged 12–17 yr received MFNS 200 μg once or twice daily or placebo. End‐points included change in 24‐h urinary free cortisol (primary), change in 24‐h urinary free cortisol corrected for creatinine (key secondary), and adverse events. Efficacy parameters included polyp size, nasal symptoms, and investigator‐evaluated therapeutic response, although the study was not powered for statistical analysis of efficacy. Results Least squares baseline mean urinary free cortisol level (nmol/24 h) for both age groups combined (N = 127) was 49.5 in the MFNS once‐daily group, 39.6 in the MFNS twice‐daily group, and 49.8 in the placebo group. Change in 24‐h urinary free cortisol did not significantly differ among MFNS ‐ and placebo‐treated subjects. Least squares mean 24‐h urinary free cortisol levels corrected for creatinine also showed no significant differences among MFNS ‐ and placebo‐treated subjects. No safety issues emerged. Conclusions Results of this study confirm the safety profile of MFNS in pediatric patients with bilateral nasal polyps over 4 months, even at double the recommended pediatric dosage for allergic rhinitis.